Hellvis73 Posted August 2, 2018 Share Posted August 2, 2018 Sorry if this is posted elsewhere and I missed it, but is there a ssd that ya'll would recommend specifically for music playback? Link to comment
tenthousandyears Posted August 2, 2018 Share Posted August 2, 2018 SSD block storage is not going to have a noticeable effect on the music. The application is going to read the same bits via the file handle unless there is something seriously wrong with your OS. Instead of hunting for a specific SSD for audio playback, I would focus on a filesystem which has strong checksum features to make sure you don't have silent corruption of your data, and make sure you have a backup copy to restore from. tmtomh 1 Link to comment
Ralf11 Posted August 2, 2018 Share Posted August 2, 2018 It isn't even clear that SSDs are better than HDDs, based on several comments from engineers here. I would work on isolation of the computer/server from the DAC. There are several threads on this, tho a summary thread would be a good idea. Link to comment
AudioDoctor Posted August 2, 2018 Share Posted August 2, 2018 I wouldn't worry about it, just get a high quality SSD and call it a day. tmtomh 1 No electron left behind. Link to comment
Popular Post davide256 Posted August 3, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted August 3, 2018 In prioritizing importance in audio performance, 1-10... I'd rank that choice at about a 3, with power supply quality a 9 and system architecture a 10. It's a 3 because you need enough storage to grow but as long as your using SATA3, the drive choice won't affect audio... the hardware solution it resides in (architecture) will JediJoker, sandyk and Screwdriver 3 Regards, Dave Audio system Link to comment
Screwdriver Posted August 4, 2018 Share Posted August 4, 2018 I use to worry about SSD's and their lifespan etc. I do IT and have deployed a butt load of them and I am not seeing any more of a failure rate then HD's. My main system has a 512TB OS drive and with swap, caching etc. going on 4 years and SMART shows 85%+ life. Just back your stuff up. ? Link to comment
rando Posted August 5, 2018 Share Posted August 5, 2018 Standard empty plastic box shaped like a 2.5" HDD, solid state drives? Broadly speaking, the benefits of them are not always related to music playback. They show a considerably better capacity for data storage when powered down and safely stored than spinning hard drives. The latter tends to forget over time if it doesn't revisit what was stored and where. SSD also excel at constant writes, think months straight of being fed a maxed out SATA III data connection, in excess of an order of magnitude above their stated rating. The get any good SSD with a good controller recommendation, broad as it was, stands true. As to your question of recommending a specific drive. You might want to check out this thread and see if it interests you. If nothing else it highlights putting the OS on a small fast drive with only your programs. M.2 do put off enough heat to require noisy fans if you don't take a lot of care crafting a passive cooling solution. How you power it and using a reasonably short high quality cable are probably the biggest factors dealing solely with SSD. Link to comment
AnotherSpin Posted August 6, 2018 Share Posted August 6, 2018 I have several years old mac mini with SSD and play my music through desktop HQ player. To get certain increase in SQ I put a music file(s) into virtual RAM disk before dragging to HQP. Files stored on external HD drives normally. Link to comment
Popular Post Uselessoldman Posted November 19, 2018 Popular Post Share Posted November 19, 2018 forget using SSD for storage complete waste of money just buy a new standard hard drive. Only use SSD for intensive access, boot drive or running virtual machines databases etc NEVER for general storage. A samsung 860 SSD 500Gb costs about £80 and for that you can get a 4 Tb drive, no brainer especially if you need more than just one. Hard drives rarely go faulty if ever unless you abuse them and stay away from energy efficient ones just stick to good old performance. jhwalker, Mr Pops Alot and marce 3 Link to comment
mjb Posted March 24, 2019 Share Posted March 24, 2019 On 11/19/2018 at 8:26 PM, Uselessoldman said: forget using SSD for storage complete waste of money just buy a new standard hard drive. Unless you're after totally silent operation, eg in conjunction with a fanless case. JediJoker 1 Link to comment
sfseay Posted April 6, 2019 Share Posted April 6, 2019 I swapped out the internal 1TB HDD in my Sony HAP-Z1 with a Micron 2TB SSD and other than more storage space I hear no difference in sound quality. MAIN SYSTEM - SST Ambrosia 2000 Second Edition Preamp and Son of Ampzilla II Amp, dCS Debussy DAC, Bricasti M5 Streamer, PS Audio P3 Power Plant, Aurender ACS10 Server/Streamer, Focal Sopra No. 1 Speakers, JL Audio F112 Subwoofer, Elac SUB3070 Subwoofer, 20TB Synology NAS, Small Green Computer i5/1TB SSD running Roon HOME OFFICE SYSTEM - NAD M10 Integrated Amp/Streamer/DAC, Auralic Altair Streamer/DAC, Oppo BDP-103 SACD, KEF LS50 Speakers Link to comment
alfe Posted April 20, 2019 Share Posted April 20, 2019 On 8/2/2018 at 5:32 PM, Hellvis73 said: Sorry if this is posted elsewhere and I missed it, but is there a ssd that ya'll would recommend specifically for music playback? If you want to go for an SSD choose an SLC . An HDD can do the job even better. Link to comment
sandyk Posted April 20, 2019 Share Posted April 20, 2019 2 hours ago, alfe said: If you want to go for an SSD choose an SLC . An HDD can do the job even better. An SSD will almost certainly have noise injected into the main PSU with a waveform having shorter rise and fall times than that of the HDD in the attachment, (i.e. noise over a wider bandwidth) but I would expect that powering the SSD via a +5V regulator from the main +12V supply would overcome this problem of noise injection into the supply , as well as reducing any radiated RF/EMI (?) How a Digital Audio file sounds, or a Digital Video file looks, is governed to a large extent by the Power Supply area. All that Identical Checksums gives is the possibility of REGENERATING the file to close to that of the original file. PROFILE UPDATED 13-11-2020 Link to comment
alfe Posted April 21, 2019 Share Posted April 21, 2019 Alex, Garbage collection is the answer. sandyk 1 Link to comment
foodfiend Posted May 20, 2019 Share Posted May 20, 2019 Buffalo have a patent on controlling current draw from the SSD. This is used DELA, as well as some high-end Japanese music servers/players. Patent on SSD The road to Hell is paved with good intentions... Link to comment
davide256 Posted May 20, 2019 Share Posted May 20, 2019 On 8/2/2018 at 9:44 PM, davide256 said: In prioritizing importance in audio performance, 1-10... I'd rank that choice at about a 3, with power supply quality a 9 and system architecture a 10. It's a 3 because you need enough storage to grow but as long as your using SATA3, the drive choice won't affect audio... the hardware solution it resides in (architecture) will Amending this comment made before discovering how good Audio Linux is as source solution OS. SSD's tend to be bright and irritating for sound when using Audio Linux, a hard drive sounds more natural but does lose some high frequency sparkle. I find myself preferring class 10 SDXC storage media as the best compromise between the two and in all cases external USB3 attached to allow independent power supply for the drive sounded better than internal SATA attached jaynyc 1 Regards, Dave Audio system Link to comment
Doak Posted May 20, 2019 Share Posted May 20, 2019 I like/prefer big (3.5") fat spinning drives such as WD Black. Doak's Audio System Link to comment
Ralf11 Posted May 20, 2019 Share Posted May 20, 2019 I use the optical tape drives at a large facility recently built in Utah... Link to comment
jaynyc Posted July 18, 2019 Share Posted July 18, 2019 On 5/20/2019 at 8:57 AM, davide256 said: Amending this comment made before discovering how good Audio Linux is as source solution OS. SSD's tend to be bright and irritating for sound when using Audio Linux, a hard drive sounds more natural but does lose some high frequency sparkle. I find myself preferring class 10 SDXC storage media as the best compromise between the two and in all cases external USB3 attached to allow independent power supply for the drive sounded better than internal SATA attached @davide256 following your post from May, specifically in regards to SSDs under Linux sounding ‘bright’... have you explored any other remedies/solutions/ideas outside of SDXC? For example, does a JCAT or Patchenko SATA cable help tame brightness? Eager to hear any of your findings. Am also curious more generally if Linux+SSD is actually bright in reality or if everything else is actually/historically just ‘dull’ in comparison. Link to comment
davide256 Posted July 18, 2019 Share Posted July 18, 2019 24 minutes ago, jaynyc said: @davide256 following your post from May, specifically in regards to SSDs under Linux sounding ‘bright’... have you explored any other remedies/solutions/ideas outside of SDXC? For example, does a JCAT or Patchenko SATA cable help tame brightness? Eager to hear any of your findings. Am also curious more generally if Linux+SSD is actually bright in reality or if everything else is actually/historically just ‘dull’ in comparison. I haven't played around with internal SATA cables but given that the symptoms showed with both internal and USB3 connected HD appliance used with AL, I don't believe SATA cables to be a causal factor. Switching to Euphony OS has helped with digital irritants, I will need to go back and retest to see if that "tames" SSD as a media drive or improves HD for transients. Won't be doing that for a few weeks until the HDPLEX comes back from repair. Regards, Dave Audio system Link to comment
bobbmd Posted November 24, 2019 Share Posted November 24, 2019 recently replaced my WD 2TB HD with Samsung 4TB SSD HD suggested by the tech at my 'authorized' Apple repair shop-- comments good or bad? Link to comment
newton Posted December 15, 2019 Share Posted December 15, 2019 do you think an adapter like this could improve SQ if supplied with a good external PS instead of the usb 5v coming from the server? I'm wondering if it must be always powered and how it chooses what feed to be used...(usb or PS) Link to comment
sandyk Posted December 17, 2019 Share Posted December 17, 2019 The best SSDs for Audio will be those shielded from the rest of the PC/Server . This may be able to be achieved by mounting them on a metal adaptor and installing them inside a metal drive bay. They should use the shortest possible SATA3 6GB/s cables which have 2 internal screened cables instead of the generic 7 wires side by side. Their power supply cable should also be screened if possible (a DIY solution) and they should be powered from a low noise +5V supply derived from the +12V rail using a separate voltage regulator to reduce interaction with other components via the power supply, as they have a much higher square wave noise level injected back into the PSU than a HDD. (see also https://thessdguy.com/solving-ssd-power-spike-issues/#more-1312) They can also radiate a lot of RF/EMI which can affect other components including WiFi. See attached .pdf. 14A2-B4.pdf How a Digital Audio file sounds, or a Digital Video file looks, is governed to a large extent by the Power Supply area. All that Identical Checksums gives is the possibility of REGENERATING the file to close to that of the original file. PROFILE UPDATED 13-11-2020 Link to comment
debt_collector Posted March 7, 2020 Share Posted March 7, 2020 Do the M.2 NVMe SSD drives also introduce noise into the system or are they better than standard SSD drives? Would an HDD still be a better choice in a NAS drive for Music? Custom built silent Media PC, Synology DS415+ NAS -> SoTM sms200Ultra/sps500 -> TAD DA1000 DAC/preamp and Bryston 4BSST2 power amp -> Harbeth SHL5 speakers and Velodyne DD10+ subwoofers. PowerQuest Carbon USB cable, Chord Company Chorus interconnects, Chord Company Signature speaker leads, Clearer Audio Silver-Line power leads Link to comment
One and a half Posted March 8, 2020 Share Posted March 8, 2020 4 hours ago, debt_collector said: Do the M.2 NVMe SSD drives also introduce noise into the system or are they better than standard SSD drives? Would an HDD still be a better choice in a NAS drive for Music? I'm looking at the M.2 as well for a new server. There's no metal enclosure and the dedicated connector doesn't really allow modification. The only M.2 Ive seen is like half RAM stick, maybe a metal case is available, havent looked as yet. The upside is the M.2 leaves a footprint like RAM, avoids the inertia of a traditional SSD, although would house the OS, which carries traffic, kinda stuck with that in any case. AS Profile Equipment List Say NO to MQA Link to comment
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